Lecture 10: People & Organisations London Metropolitan University MBA Programme || Module Number: MN7181 || Lecturer: Mr Laleen Katagodage || E-Soft batch-14-The Ethical Context of HRM
The Ethical Context of HRM
Human Resources managers were often thought as the control apparatus
of the employing organizations and their sole purpose was to keep the
“organizational show on the road”, but, as organizations evolve and gain
awareness of ethical issues, they realize the importance of these professionals
as “ethical agents”. (Ewing and Tharp, 2003)
We choose to focus on these professionals for two main reasons:
Firstly, conventional wisdom suggests that “HR related jobs are a laboratory of
ethical scenarios, particularly due to the high degree of role-multiplicity”
(Wooten, 2001) thus it becomes important to examine the scenarios in which HR
professionals are often involved in and gather valuable observations to help
them ponder and enhance their ability to deal effectively with ethical
problems.
Secondly, while
philosophers became active in researching business ethics in the 1960s and
1970s, business ethics has been a staple of Catholic thinking on business for
most of the last century (Bowie, 2000). Since then, the field of business
ethics went through a time of definition to an emerging research field in the
1970’s, followed by specific research streams in the 1980’s (De George,1987).
From the 1990’s on there have been significant academic contributions including
many quantitative and qualitative research. The concept can be broadly defined
as the study of Business situations, activities and decisions where issues of
right and wrong are addressed (Crane and Matten ,2010)
As Winstanley and
Woodall (2000: 11) note, right based ethical frameworks tends to draw on two
key concepts from the philosopher – Immanuel Kant as follows:
- The principle that that what is right for one person is right for everyone, and thus it is important to do unto others as you would be done by – the criteria of universality and reversibility.
- The principle of respect for people whereby they should be treated as ends in themselves and never as means to an end.
This Kantian framework
forms the basis of deontological perspective to business ethics because of its
focus on duty, and its perspective that links ethics to things that are good in
themselves (Abreu and Badii, 2006). It epitomizes what Winstanley and Woodall
(2000: 11) describe as ‘worth of the individual’. Abrue and Badii (2006: 110a)
observe that the theory of Kant proposes several rights that concern the
following issues:
1) The fundamental right to life and safety.
2) The human rights to privacy.
3) Freedom of conscience.
4) Freedom to speech
5) Freedom to private property.
Steps to Ethical Decision Making
There
are many models that provide several steps to the decision-making process. One
such model was created in the late 1990s for the counseling profession but can
apply to nearly every profession from health care to business. (Corey, G.,
Corey, M. S and Callanan, P. 1998).
Step 1: Identify the problem. Sometimes just realizing a particular situation is ethical
can be the important first step. Occasionally in our organizations, we may feel
that it’s just the “way of doing business” and not think to question the
ethical nature.
Step 2: Identify the potential issues involved. Who could get hurt? What are the issues that could
negatively impact people and/or the company? What is the worst-case scenario if
we choose to do nothing?
Step 3: Review relevant ethical guidelines. Does the organization have policies and procedures in place
to handle this situation? For example, if a client gives you a gift, there may
be a rule in place as to whether you can accept gifts and if so, the value
limit of the gift you can accept.
Step 4: Know relevant laws and regulations. If the company doesn’t necessarily have a rule against it,
could it be looked at as illegal?
Step 5: Obtain consultation. Seek support from supervisors, coworkers, friends, and
family, and especially seek advice from people who you feel are moral and
ethical.
Step 6: Consider possible and probable courses of action. What are all of the possible solutions for solving the
problem? Brainstorm a list of solutions—all solutions are options during this
phase.
Step 7: List the consequences of the probable courses of
action. What are both the positive and
negative benefits of each proposed solution? Who can the decision affect?
Step 8: Decide on what appears to be the best course of
action. With the facts we have, and the
analysis done, choosing the best course of action is the final step. There may
not always be a “perfect” solution, but the best solution is the one that seems
to create the most good and the least harm.
Reference
Abreu, J. L., and
Badii, M. H., (2006). Proposal of an ethical model for human resource
management, International Journal of Good Conscience. 1
Bowie. N., (2000) “Business Ethics.”
In New Directions in Ethics, edited by JosephP. De Marco and Richard M. Fox.
New York: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Corey,
G., Corey, M. S and Callanan, P., (1998). Issues and ethics in the helping
professions. Toronto: Brooks/Cole
Publishing Company; Syracuse School of Education.
Crane. A and Matten. D.,
(2010) Business Ethics (Third Edition): Oxford University Press; 2010,
Softcover; 3rd edition.
De George. R., (1987). Business
Ethics. New York, London: Macmillan, Collier.
Ewing and Tharp, (2003). Ethics and
Human Resource Management: A study on Ethical perceptions of HRM Practices
Wooten, K. C. (2001). "Ethical dilemmas in human resource
management: an application of a multidimensional
framework, a unifying taxonomy, and applicable codes. Human Resource Management
Review.
Winstanley, D and
Woodall, J., (2000). The ethical dimension of human resource management. Human
Resource Management Journal, 10
Bibliography
Palmer,
G. (2007). Socio-political theory and ethics in HRM, in A Pinnington., R
Macklin, & T Campbell, (eds.) Human resource management: ethics and
employment. New York: Oxford University Press.
Raibom,
C., and Payne, D. (1996). TQM: just what the ethicist ordered. Journal of
Business Ethics, 15: 563-572.



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